Whelk egg cases

Telling your whelk egg case strings apart, Southern New England to Mid-Atlantic division:This is the egg case of the channeled whelk, Busycotypus canaliculatus. Note how the edges of each individual capsule comes together as if pinched, giving each capsule a sharp edge.This is the egg case string of the knobbed whelk, Busycon carica. Note how the edge of each capsule is flattened, like a sturdy coin.

Each capsule contains 25 or more tiny baby whelks in their tiny baby shells. Here are some of the channeled whelks who didn’t make it:In the palm of my hand. Each is about 3/16ths of an inch long. Check out this earlier posting for views of the baby knobbed whelks.

O, and telling your adults apart is straight-forward:The knobbed whelk, top, has knobs on its spiral. The channeled whelk (7.25″ long), bottom, has a deep groove in its spiral. Both these shells were found at Fort Tilden in Queens (the egg cases were found on Nantucket). Color of the shell can vary: NYC-local whelks don’t have the coral pink interiors you find in Massachusetts.

The phrase “whelk egg cases” and variations thereof, turns out to be one of the most popular internet searches leading to this blog. So this one’s for you, stranger.

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And to think all these years I never even bothered looking closer at those segments. William Blake, who was probably not familiar with our whelks, wrote: “To see a world in a grain of sand/And a heaven in a wild flower/Hold infinity in the palm of your hand/And eternity in an hour

I’m sort of obsessed with shells, and the baby whelks on that other post you linked to are GORGEOUS! Sometimes I think that nature just ruins me for modern art and design…what could be more incredible (function/form + beauty) than a whelk egg case filled with micro-whelks?

As for Google, my top search term is “Totoro,” so one just has to go with it…

very interesting, use to find them washed up on the Delaware beaches.
Usually tangled up in other seaweed and trash. would pick it up
and could hear the rattle of something unknown inside the compartments.
thanks, after all these years, now I know…

Thanks for the great info and photos. i noticed those tiny whelks inside the casing many years ago. I didn’t know there were animals in there. When i find the casing on the beach, does that mean it won’t survive or they’re dead? Or should i throw it back in the water?